Recently I have been involved in re-designing a university
laboratory course. The process got me thinking about the philosophy behind the
way we teach science. And I have come to the conclusion that we've got it
wrong. Well, largely wrong.
Let's start from the beginning.
The way I was exposed to science as a child was through museum exhibits, books,
magazines and science live shows. I suspect your experience of the practical
side of science was similar. It was great seeing how vinegar and baking soda frothed
and bubbled like a volcano. It was cool seeing the catalytic effect of
cigarette ash when trying to burn a sugar cube. I loved seeing a flower smashed
into hundreds of pieces after being dipped in liquid nitrogen. These cool
demonstrations of science gradually became more complex as I progressed through
high school and into college and university. But even at university, the
principle was still much the same. The underlying principle throughout all my
science education was to understand certain concepts and memorise certain
facts. The way this usually worked (even at the university level) was that we
were taught something in lectures and then the labs provided practical
experience of the concepts being taught. My science education was probably
somewhat unique, since I was home schooled, but I think that science education in
principle is largely the same throughout the Western world: science is taught
as concepts to be understood and facts to be memorised.
Granted, science concepts and
facts need to be taught and understood and practical demonstrations/experiences
are great for re-enforcing concepts taught in class. But science practical
classes are rarely true experiments. They may be described as experiments but
there is no element of uncertainty; there is no new knowledge gained. There is
just re-enforcement of ideas to which students have already been exposed.
Science practical classes are largely recipes that are followed to give an
expected outcome. And if you don't get the expected outcome, then you must have
done something wrong.
I propose a complete
re-imagining of science education. From the very beginning of primary school to
the very end of university, we need to focus more on the process of science.
Yes, we need to teach students as much of the body of scientific knowledge as
they can take in, but more importantly we need to teach students about the
process of generating a hypothesis, designing and performing an experiment to
test the hypothesis and comparing the experimental result to the hypothesis.
One way we could do this is through designing practical classes where failing
to get the desired result does not mean 'failing' the lab class. We need to
give students the mental framework they need to be able to ask intelligent
questions and generate meaningful experiments, provide the resources for them
to conduct these experiment, and then give them the freedom to conduct their
experiments, even if we know that they won't all work.
That's how we create good
scientists.
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